Rethinking the classroom: Why teachers may focus more on human development in the future |
In a piece for Psychology Today Sam Goldstein, Ph.D., adjunct faculty member at the University of Utah School of Medicine, argues that the role of teachers could evolve significantly over the next 50 years, shifting from delivering information to guiding students’ personal and intellectual development. As technology and artificial intelligence make information more accessible and automate routine tasks, schools may place greater emphasis on helping students develop resilience, creativity, self-awareness, and adaptive thinking rather than simply memorizing facts. The author suggests future classrooms may move away from traditional lecture-based models toward flexible, inquiry-driven environments that prioritize student-centered learning. Teachers could act more as coaches or facilitators, helping students build emotional intelligence, executive function skills, and critical thinking abilities. Social-emotional learning and reflective dialogue may become integrated throughout the curriculum to support collaboration, empathy, and self-regulation. Assessment methods may also evolve, with portfolios, collaborative projects, and formative feedback replacing an overreliance on standardized tests. Technology, including AI, could personalize instruction and identify learning gaps, while teachers focus on ethical reasoning, mentorship, and meaningful relationships with students. Goldstein also envisions stronger partnerships between schools and communities, with students engaging in service-learning and real-world problem-solving.